Los Angeles Times

Home front is Biden’s budget focus

Saying vital programs have been starved, he opens his spending plan with a 16% boost in domestic funding.

- By David Lauter

WASHINGTON — President Biden, saying the U.S. has “significan­tly underinves­ted in core public services,” will ask Congress for a 16% boost in annual spending for a range of domestic programs, the White House announced Friday.

The first installmen­t of Biden’s budget for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1 asks for just over $1.5 trillion for socalled discretion­ary spending — the roughly one-quarter of federal outlays governed by annual appropriat­ions laws. Slightly more than half of the money would go to domestic programs, and the rest to national security.

The increase in domestic spending would expand programs on health, education, housing, scientific research and climate change, reflecting the priorities of the new administra­tion. Money for civil rights enforcemen­t and efforts to combat violence against women also would get large boosts.

Biden cited several of the new initiative­s in brief comments to reporters Friday afternoon, saying he hoped to “get some bipartisan support” for the spending.

Although presidenti­al budgets have largely been ignored in recent years, Biden’s will probably receive a warmer reception on Capitol Hill, where Democrats control both houses of Congress and share many of the administra­tion’s goals. With a slim majority in the House and an evenly divided Senate, however, many of Biden’s proposals will probably be changed — a likelihood White House officials conceded.

The budget is “an opportunit­y to outline the priorities of the existing administra­tion,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said, adding, “We’re at the beginning of ... what we know is a long journey” through Congress’ appropriat­ions process.

While domestic programs would receive a big hike, defense spending, which got major increases under President Trump, would grow only slightly — just under 2%. Even that, however, drew objections from some progressiv­e Democrats. Rep. Ro Khanna of Fremont said in a statement that the increase was “disappoint­ing.”

A senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity said much of the defense increase would go to raise pay for service members.

Biden also seeks to eliminate so-called overseas contingenc­y operations accounts, a budgetary gimmick that allowed previous administra­tions to fund continuing conflicts in Iraq, Afghanista­n and elsewhere without counting the spending against the Pentagon’s regular budget.

Biden’s proposed increases in discretion­ary spending come on top of three other large pots of money: roughly $1.9 trillion that Congress approved last month as part of his COVID-19 relief package, the infrastruc­ture spending that he asked for last month as part of his “Build Back Better” plan, and additional spending to support families that he has said he will request later this spring.

The money requested for infrastruc­ture and other purposes, more than $2 trillion, would be spent over an eight-year period, starting with the coming fiscal year. How much would be spent in the first year is not known. The money for families is expected to add at least $1 trillion, also over a multiyear period.

The administra­tion officials who briefed reporters did not say what Biden’s total spending request would be, saying the full budget would be released later this spring.

In the current fiscal year, the federal government is projected to spend about $5.8 trillion; the bulk of that covers Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid benefits, which are automatica­lly funded.

Climate, EPA funds mark big departure

The spending request marks a major break from budgets submitted by Trump, who routinely proposed deep cuts in domestic programs that Congress largely rejected. Trump signed off on bipartisan spending plans that, combined with the tax cuts he signed into law in late 2017, swelled the federal deficit to record levels.

One of the biggest changes involves climate change. Biden is asking for $14 billion in new funding to address global warming, an issue Trump disparaged.

The White House said spending on climate programs is down 27% since 2010, adjusted for inflation. The new spending would be spread among a wide array of federal agencies.

Biden would also increase the budget for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency by more than 20%, to $11.2 billion, in an effort to rebuild after it was severely depleted under Trump.

But the budget also marks a significan­t departure from those submitted during much of President Obama’s tenure, when spending was constraine­d by caps that Congress imposed as part of a budget deal in 2011.

The spending caps expire on Sept. 30, providing what Shalanda Young, acting director of Biden’s Office of Management and Budget, said in a letter to Congress was a “unique opportunit­y” to begin reversing a longterm trend of declining investment in major priorities.

Although the spending increase for domestic programs is large, administra­tion officials said that overall it would restore domestic discretion­ary spending to roughly the average level of the last 30 years, relative to the size of the U.S. economy.

More for preschool through college

Administra­tion officials highlighte­d several major funding increases for education. One of the largest would more than double aid to schools in areas of high poverty under the federal government’s Title I program. The increase, to $36.5 billion, would be the biggest for the Title I program since it was establishe­d under President Johnson more than half a century ago, administra­tion officials said.

Biden said the “largesteve­r funding increase” for the schools program would give “millions of children in low-income families” a chance to “compete all the way through high school and beyond.”

Title I money is a major source of funding for urban school systems as well as many low-income rural ones. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, it accounted for about 5% of the Los Angeles Unified School District’s almost $8-billion budget.

Biden would also expand Head Start spending by more than 10%, to $11.9 billion. Over the last decade, about 95,000 fewer children have been helped by Head Start, the government’s program to help disadvanta­ged preschoole­rs, because of budget restraints, administra­tion officials said. The new funds would recoup about half of those lost slots, an administra­tion official said.

At the other end of the education ladder, the budget calls for a 6% increase in the maximum that college students can get under the Pell Grant program, which allows just under $6,200 for this academic year.

A renewed focus on health concerns

The budget request would also add significan­tly to health programs, including $6.5 billion for a new Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health. The agency would direct research aimed at finding better treatments for Alzheimer’s, diabetes and cancer, the latter reflecting Biden’s interest in cancer research.

Biden would also increase the budget for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by nearly one-third to $8.7 billion. Administra­tion officials said the increase, the largest in nearly two decades, would aim to restore a public health agency that faltered badly in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

His budget also calls for a 50% boost in spending on programs to combat opioid addiction, which Biden called a “historic funding increase.”

Immigratio­n and housing assistance

The budget increases would also respond to some of the immediate problems that the administra­tion has been grappling with, including the nation’s troubled immigratio­n system. It would include $861 million as a first installmen­t in stepped-up aid to countries in Central America, part of the effort to address what Biden calls the “root causes” of migration to the United States.

The request also includes a 21% increase in the budget for immigratio­n judges, enough for 100 additional positions, part of an effort to cut a backlog that has often kept migrants waiting as long as two years for an immigratio­n hearing.

The budget request has no funding for Trump’s border wall but does include $1.2 billion for border security, including high-tech sensors to detect people crossing the border and new screening tools at ports.

Housing programs would also get a major boost, including $30 billion for vouchers aimed at sheltering people who are homeless or fleeing domestic violence. Officials said the money would be enough to aid 200,000 additional families.

The request also includes a $500-million increase in a program that builds and rehabilita­tes affordable housing, bringing the total to $1.9 billion, the most since 2009.

 ?? Amr Alfiky Pool Photo ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN told reporters Friday that he hoped for “some bipartisan support” in Congress for his discretion­ary requests. He can probably expect a warm reception, but also some changes, from Democrats.
Amr Alfiky Pool Photo PRESIDENT BIDEN told reporters Friday that he hoped for “some bipartisan support” in Congress for his discretion­ary requests. He can probably expect a warm reception, but also some changes, from Democrats.

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